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Vintage Revere Ware, manufactured before 1968 and carrying the prized "Process Patent" maker's mark on the thick copper bottom, is finding its way back into modern kitchens. (Photo courtesy of Blane van Pletzen-Rands) Revere Ware was a line of consumer and commercial kitchen wares introduced in 1939 by the Revere Copper and Brass Corp.
Revere Ware – a line of consumer and commercial kitchen wares introduced in 1939 by the Revere Brass & Copper Corp., focusing primarily on consumer cookware such as skillets, sauce pans, stock pots, and tea kettles. Staub – a brand of enameled cast iron cookware and bakeware that was originally headquartered in Turckheim, Alsace, France
Joseph Warren Revere, then owner of Revere, was a director of the Boston and Providence Railroad Corporation. Through a series of mergers in 1928 and 1929, Revere Copper became Revere Copper and Brass, Inc., headquartered in Rome, New York with the first president being George H. Allen, [ 6 ] with several plants and product divisions.
Stamford ware: 9th to 13th centuries AD One of the earliest forms of glazed English ceramics Stamford, Lincolnshire [12] Surrey whiteware: 13th to 16th centuries AD includes Kingston-type ware, Coarse Border ware, Cheam ware Surrey-Hampshire border area [13] Thetford ware: Late 9th to mid-12th centuries AD Hard sandy fabric, typically grey in ...
Holloware (mostly in American English) or hollow-ware [1] is tableware that forms a vessel or container of some kind, as opposed to flatware such as plates. [2] Examples include sugar bowls, creamers, coffee pots, teapots, soup tureens, hot food covers, and jugs. It may be in pottery, metals such as silver, iron, glass or plastic.
John D. Larkin. Buffalo Pottery was founded in 1901 by John D. Larkin (1845-1926) to supply the Larkin Company with premiums for its customers. The company's first general manager, Lewis H. Bown, recruited a number of skilled craftsmen and artisans from throughout the United States, including William J. Rea, Anna Kappler, and Ralph Stuart.
The product of the earliest factory is usually called Lund's Bristol ware and was made from about 1750 until 1752, when the operation was merged with Worcester porcelain; this was soft-paste porcelain. In 1770 the Plymouth porcelain factory, which made England's first hard-paste porcelain, moved to Bristol, where it operated until 1782.